* origin/develop: (169 commits)
Improve the user card for deactivated users
Update CHANGELOG.md
Update CHANGELOG.md
Allow canceling a follow request
Simple policy reasons for instance specific policies
entity_normalizer: Escape name when parsing user
Translated using Weblate (Spanish)
Translated using Weblate (Catalan)
Translated using Weblate (Korean)
Translated using Weblate (Japanese (ja_PEDANTIC))
Translated using Weblate (Indonesian)
Translated using Weblate (Esperanto)
Translated using Weblate (Vietnamese)
Translated using Weblate (Italian)
Translated using Weblate (Vietnamese)
Translated using Weblate (Indonesian)
Translated using Weblate (Italian)
Translated using Weblate (Vietnamese)
Translated using Weblate (Indonesian)
Translated using Weblate (Chinese (Simplified))
...
When a follow request is sent, but not (yet) accepted, the behaviour is now to cancel the request instead of re sending.
The reason is double
* You couldn't cancel a follow request if you change your mind and the request wasn't answered yet
* Instances don't always correctly process a new follow request when the following is already happening. If something went wrong (e;g. the target server thinks you're following, but your instance thinks you're not yet), it's better to first sent an unfollow. This is the behaviour that Mastodon and most probably most other clients have. Therefore this flow is more tested and expected by other instances.
In January 2020 Pleroma backend stopped escaping HTML in display names
and passed that responsibility on frontends, compliant with Mastodon's
version of Mastodon API [1]. Pleroma-FE was subsequently modified to
escape the display name [2], however only in the "name_html" field. This
was fine however, since that's what the code rendering display names used.
However, 2 months ago an MR [3] refactoring the way the frontend does emoji
and mention rendering was merged. One of the things it did was moving away
from doing emoji rendering in the entity normalizer and use the unescaped
'user.name' in the rendering code, resulting in HTML injection being
possible again.
This patch escapes 'user.name' as well, as far as I can tell there is no
actual use for an unescaped display name in frontend code, especially
when it comes from MastoAPI, where it is not supposed to be HTML.
[1]: https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma-fe/-/merge_requests/1052
[2]: https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma/-/merge_requests/2167
[3]: https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma-fe/-/merge_requests/1392
Originally the media viewer would think every touch is a swipe (one-finger
touch event), so we would encounter the case where a two-finger scale event
would incorrectly change the current media. This is now fixed.